\chapter{Introduction}
\label{chap:intro}

\section{Getting started}

This is the introductory chapter.  This will give you some
ideas of how to use \LaTeX~\cite{lam1994} to typeset your document.  
And now a quote:
\munquote{\LaTeX{} is a system for typesetting documents.  Its first widely
available version, mysteriously numbered 2.09, appeared in 1985.  \LaTeX{}
is now extremely popular in the scientific and academic communities, and
it is used extensively in industry.  It has become a \emph{lingua franca}
of the scientific world; scientists send thir papers electronically to
colleagues around the world in the form of \LaTeX{} input.}{lam1994}

By default, all text is double spaced, however, quotes and footnotes
must be singled spaced.\munfootnote{This is a single spaced footnote.
SGS requires that footnotes be singled spaced and this can be done with
the \texttt{$\backslash$munfootnote} command.} The left margin is slightly
wider than the right margin.  This is to compensate for binding.  

Mathematical formulae are also possible as shown in
Equation~\ref{eqn:sum}.

\muneqn{sum}{
\sum_{i = 0}^{n} i^2
}

A slightly more complicated equation is given in Equation~\ref{eqn:array}.

\muneqn{array}{
\left(\begin{array}{c}k\\3\end{array}\right) + 
\frac{\left(\begin{array}{c}k\\2\end{array}\right)\left(\begin{array}{c}k - 2\\2\end{array}\right)}{2} = 
\frac{1}{(k - 2)!}\ \sum_{i = 0}^{k - 3}(-1)^i\left(\begin{array}{c}k - 2\\i\end{array}\right)(k - 2 - i)^k
}

\section{Some hints}
\label{sec:hints}
\begin{itemize}
\item Concentrate on content and not on presentation.

\item Discuss with your supervisor in what fomat he or she wants your thesis
written. \emph{e.g.}  Word, WordPerfect, \LaTeX\ etc.
\end{itemize}

In addition to using \verb+\ref+ to refer to equations, you can also
use it (in conjunction with the \verb+\label+ command) to refer to
sections and chapters without hard coding the numbers themselves.
For example, this is Section~\ref{sec:hints} of Chapter~\ref{chap:intro}.

\section{The \texttt{Makefile}}

You can use \texttt{make} to build your thesis.  This will run the
\texttt{bibtex} program to create your bibliography and will also
re-run \LaTeX\ to ensure that all references are resolved.

To make a PostScript copy of your thesis, type \texttt{make thesis.ps}.
Running \texttt{make thesis.pdf} will generate a PDF copy of your thesis.


\section{Changing Fonts}

Change fonts: {\Large Large}, \textsc{Small Caps}

\section{Subsection}
\subsection{Subsection}
\subsubsection{Subsubsection}
\subsubsection{Subsubsection}

